Displaying 1 - 10 of 14 Resources

Acceleration due to gravity at the space station

What is the acceleration due to gravity at the space station.

Subject and Topic
Form 2
Physics
Motion in a straight line
Motion under gravity
Resource Type
Video
Language
English
Publisher
Khan Academy
Publication Date
2011
Creator/Author
Khan Academy
Keyword
Motion
Gravity

Cell theory

Introduction to cell theory--the idea that 1) all living things are made of one or more cells, 2) cells are the basic unit of life and 3) all cells come from other cells. Explore the roles that Hooke, Leeuwenhoek and others played in developing cell theory.

Hooke and Leeuwenhoek were two of the first scientists to use microscopes to study the microscopic world of cells. Hooke coined the term "cell" after observing the tiny compartments in cork, while Leeuwenhoek discovered a variety of living creatures in pond water, blood, and other samples. They contributed to the cell theory by suggesting that cells are the fundamental units of life and structure, and that all living things consist of one or more cells that originate from other cells by division. 

Subject and Topic
Form 1
Biology
Cell structure and organisation
Concept of cells
Resource Type
Video
Language
English
Publisher
Khan Academy
Publication Date
2015
Creator/Author
Sal Khan
Keyword
Cells

Cells and organisms

All living things are made up of cells, which is the smallest unit that can be said to be alive. An organism may consist of one single cell (unicellular) or many different numbers and types of cells (multicellular).

Subject and Topic
Form 1
Biology
Cell structure and organisation
Concept of cells
Resource Type
Video
Language
English
Publisher
Khan Academy
Publication Date
2022
Creator/Author
Khan Academy
Keyword
Cells

Comparing animal and plant cells

Plant cells have a cell wall in addition to a cell membrane, whereas animal cells have only a cell membrane. Plants use cell walls to provide structure to the plant. Plant cells contain organelles called chloroplasts, while animal cells do not. Chloroplasts allow plants to make the food they need to live using photosynthesis.

Subject and Topic
Form 1
Biology
Cell structure and organisation
Plant and animal cells
Resource Type
Video
Language
English
Publisher
Khan Academy
Publication Date
2022
Creator/Author
Khan Academy
Keyword
Animal cell
Plant cell

Gravity for astronauts in orbit

Why do astronauts appear weightless despite being near the Earth?

Subject and Topic
Form 2
Physics
Motion in a straight line
Motion under gravity
Resource Type
Video
Language
English
Publisher
Khan Academy
Publication Date
2011
Creator/Author
Sal Khan
Keyword
Gravity
Laws of motion
Velocity

Introduction to the cell

Introduction to the cell.

Subject and Topic
Form 1
Biology
Cell structure and organisation
Concept of cells
Resource Type
Video
Language
English
Publisher
Khan Academy
Publication Date
2017
Creator/Author
Sal Khan
Keyword
Cells

Introduction to gravity

Basics of gravity and the Law of Universal Gravitation.

Subject and Topic
Form 2
Physics
Motion in a straight line
Motion under gravity
Resource Type
Video
Language
English
Publisher
Khan Academy
Publication Date
2012
Creator/Author
Sal Khan
Keyword
Gravity
Law of Universal Gravitation

Motion in One Dimension

This unit is about how things move along a straight line or, more scientifically, how things move in one dimension. Examples of this would be the movement (motion) of cars along a straight road or of trains along straight railway tracks.

Subject and Topic
Form 2
Physics
Motion in a straight line
Motion under gravity
Resource Type
Studieboeken
Language
English
Publisher
Department of Higher Education
Publication Date
No date
Creator/Author
Leigh Kleynhans
Contributor
Michael Atkinson
Keyword
Distance
Displacement
Speed
Velocity

Overview of animal and plant cells

Overview of animal and plant cells. Topics include cell walls, vacuoles, chloroplasts, peroxisomes, lysosomes, mitochondria, etc.

Subject and Topic
Form 1
Biology
Cell structure and organisation
Plant and animal cells
Resource Type
Video
Language
English
Publisher
Khan Academy
Publication Date
2015
Creator/Author
Sal Khan
Keyword
Animal cell
Plant cell

Scale of cells

Even though molecules, proteins, viruses, and cells are all tiny, there are significant size differences between them. The diameter of a water molecule is roughly 0.28 nanometers. The diameter of the protein hemoglobin is roughly 5 nanometers. The diameter of the HIV virus is roughly 120 nanometers. A red blood cell is 6-8 micrometers.

Subject and Topic
Form 1
Biology
Cell structure and organisation
Concept of cells
Resource Type
Video
Language
English
Publisher
Khan Academy
Publication Date
2015
Creator/Author
Sal Khan
Keyword
Cells